首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


The Impact of Global Change Factors on Redox Signaling Underpinning Stress Tolerance
Authors:Sergi Munné-Bosch  Guillaume Queval  Christine H Foyer
Institution:Departament de Biologia Vegetal, Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain (S.M.-B.);Centre for Plant Sciences, Faculty of Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom (G.Q., C.H.F.)
Abstract:The plant cuticle is an extracellular hydrophobic layer that covers the aerial epidermis of all land plants, providing protection against desiccation and external environmental stresses. The past decade has seen considerable progress in assembling models for the biosynthesis of its two major components, the polymer cutin and cuticular waxes. Most recently, two breakthroughs in the long-sought molecular bases of alkane formation and polyester synthesis have allowed construction of nearly complete biosynthetic pathways for both waxes and cutin. Concurrently, a complex regulatory network controlling the synthesis of the cuticle is emerging. It has also become clear that the physiological role of the cuticle extends well beyond its primary function as a transpiration barrier, playing important roles in processes ranging from development to interaction with microbes. Here, we review recent progress in the biochemistry and molecular biology of cuticle synthesis and function and highlight some of the major questions that will drive future research in this field.The first plant colonizers of land, approximately 450 million years ago in the mid-Paleozoic era, faced a daunting set of challenges associated with their new terrestrial environment, including desiccation, temperature extremes, gravity, and increased exposure to UV radiation (Waters, 2003; Leliaert et al., 2011). The transition from an exclusively aquatic to a terrestrial life style, therefore, would have necessitated the evolution of a toolbox of morphological and physiological features, some of which are apparent through studies of the fossil record or by examining extant plant lineages. For example, the development of architecturally complex cell walls for biomechanical support and structural protection, which typify modern land plants, can be traced back to divergence and radiation within the Charophycean green algae, their immediate ancestors (Sørensen et al., 2011). However, the most critical adaptive trait for survival during terrestrialization would have been the ability to retain water in increasingly dehydrating habitats. Consequently, the capacity to synthesize, deposit, and maintain a hydrophobic surface layer, or cuticle, over the surfaces of aerial organs was arguably one of the most important innovations in the history of plant evolution. This idea is borne out by both fossil evidence (Edwards, 1993) and the ubiquity of cuticles among all extant embryophytes, from bryophytes (Budke et al., 2012) to angiosperms.Armed with a protective skin, together with a range of adaptive strategies for acquiring and conserving water, as well as for avoiding or tolerating water stress, embryophytes now thrive in a wide range of desiccating environments (Ogburn and Edwards, 2010; Aroca et al., 2012; Delaux et al., 2012; Jones and Dolan, 2012; Obata and Fernie, 2012; Gaff and Oliver, 2013). Accordingly, cuticles from a broad range of species, and in various ecological and agricultural contexts, have been studied from the perspective of their role as the primary barrier to transpirational water loss. However, it is now clear that cuticles play numerous other roles in plant development, physiology, and interactions with the abiotic environment and other organisms. Indeed, in recent years, there have been many instances of unexpected associations between the cuticle and diverse aspects of plant biology. In parallel, the past decade has seen considerable progress in understanding the biosynthesis of the major cuticle components and the complex regulatory networks that control cuticle synthesis and assembly.This review summarizes recent progress in elucidating the biochemistry and molecular biology of cuticle synthesis and function and highlights some of the connections to other aspects of plant biology, including signaling, pathogen defense, and development. Given the broad scope and space limitation, not every aspect of cuticle biosynthesis is covered in depth, and recent specialized reviews focusing on cuticle biomechanical properties (Domínguez et al., 2011), defensive functions (Reina-Pinto and Yephremov, 2009), and transport barrier properties (Burghardt and Riederer, 2006) may be of further interest. In addition, key ongoing questions in the field are discussed, and potential future approaches to resolving those questions are suggested.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号